Overall latest MTA

0.814

Change since 2018

0.012

Number of species and habitats

2051

Methodology

The calculation of the MTA indicator (defined by Jantke et al. (2019) ) used EEA species and habitat reporting data and Natura 2000 information. For each 10 x 10 km grid id in the EEA Reference grid, we estimated the cumulative coverage of Natura 2000 sites per time frame, which we identified from the date SPAs, SCIs or SACs were designated or first added to the database. We then summarized per species or habitat the total distribution as well as the coverage of Natura 2000 sites within their distribution. See also the Section 2 section for a more detailed methodology breakdown.
The current calculation of the MTA is feasible every 6 years and can also be further refined to account for land-cover and land-use change, for example using data from the Corine Accounting layer.

Data

As data sources we relied for this demonstration on the officially used Article 12 (‘Birds directive’) and Article 17 (‘Habitats directive’) reporting data. Sensitive species were also included in those calculations.

As conservation areas we relied on the Natura2000 geopackage (last updated in April 2024).

Targets were calculated either as flat (30% of distribution), log-linear (following (Rodrigues et al. 2004)) or targets minimizing species-extinction risk (following (Jung et al. 2021)). Different target formulations are feasible and should ideally be based on species-specific process that considers ecological features and conservation needs.

Jantke K, Kuempel CD, McGowan J, et al (2019) Metrics for evaluating representation target achievement in protected area networks. Diversity and Distributions 25:170–175. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12853
Jung M, Arnell A, Lamo X de, et al (2021) Areas of global importance for conserving terrestrial biodiversity, carbon and water. Nature Ecology & Evolution 5:1499–1509. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-021-01528-7
Rodrigues ASL, Akçakaya HR, Andelman SJ, et al (2004) Global gap analysis: Priority regions for expanding the global protected-area network. BioScience 54:1092. https://doi.org/10.1641/0006-3568(2004)054[1092:GGAPRF]2.0.CO;2

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